Abstract

The Indonesian archipelago features an extraordinarily rich biota. However, the actual taxonomic inventory of the archipelago remains highly incomplete and there is hardly any significant taxonomic activity that utilises recent technological advances. The IndoBioSys project was established as a biodiversity information system aiming at, amongst other goals, creating inventories of the Indonesian entomofauna using DNA barcoding. Here, we release the first large scale assessment of the megadiverse insect groups that occur in the Mount Halimun-Salak National Park, one of the largest tropical rain-forest ecosystem in West Java, with a focus on Hymenoptera, Coleoptera, Diptera and Lepidoptera collected with Malaise traps. From September 2015 until April 2016, 34 Malaise traps were placed in different localities in the south-eastern part of the Halimun-Salak National Park. A total of 4,531 specimens were processed for DNA barcoding and in total, 2,382 individuals produced barcode compliant records, representing 1,195 exclusive BINs or putative species in 98 insect families. A total of 1,149 BINs were new to BOLD. Of 1,195 BINs detected, 804 BINs were singletons and more than 90% of the BINs incorporated less than five specimens. The astonishing heterogeneity of BINs, as high as 1.1 exclusive BIN per specimen of Diptera successfully processed, shows that the cost/benefit relationship of the discovery of new species in those areas is very low. In four genera of Chalcidoidea, a superfamily of the Hymenoptera, the number of discovered species was higher than the number of species known from Indonesia, suggesting that our samples contain many species that are new to science. Those numbers shows how fast molecular pipelines contribute substantially to the objective inventorying of the fauna giving us a good picture of how potentially diverse tropical areas might be.

Highlights

  • The Indonesian archipelago features an extraordinarily rich biota that is, amongst other factors, derived from its sheer size and geographic position, basically linking the Oriental and Australian regions

  • A total of 1,149 BINs were new to Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD)

  • Given the enormous number of specimens, the orders Coleoptera and Hymenoptera were chosen as the main target groups for the present analysis

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Summary

Introduction

The Indonesian archipelago features an extraordinarily rich biota that is, amongst other factors, derived from its sheer size and geographic position, basically linking the Oriental and Australian regions This transition was first described in detail by Wallace (1860), who laid the foundation for the discipline of biogeography in this region. Subsets of the samples obtained were submitted to a well-established pipeline employing DNA barcoding (Hebert et al 2003, Ivanova et al 2006) in order to estimate species diversity (see Ratnasingham and Hebert 2007, Ratnasingham and Hebert 2013) and to obtain data for future beta diversity studies with data from other localities We release these data with an analysis of their taxonomic content, an approximation of the species diversity encountered and an evaluation of the novelty of the data with respect to publicly available data from the Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD)

Materials and Methods
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